To summarize, God is the Supreme Being. He is the
First Cause, and He is the Standard by which all is measured. Although
He is Transcendent, He is also Personal and able to be with
us. Logic tells us (through Natural Theology and Natural
Revelation) that a being with these attributes must exist. In
order to begin our study of God's plan, we need to be aware of the
basis of His nature... (MORE)

'Holy' is not a common word - it is a word that is reserved to describe God alone. Because
it is so limited in use, it is hard to understand. Some define
holy as 'good', or as 'sinless'. While there is a level of truth
to these types of descriptions, it is far from the ultimate meaning of
the word. The best way to think of the full potential of the
description, is that Holy IS God. It is what He is. It is His nature. (MORE)

God is a 'person' in the sense that He has 'personality', a thinking
and deciding nature, and most importantly, a LOVING nature. It is only
in with a healthy understanding of God's nature (that He is a Holy,
Transcendent Being with incalculable wrath against dissent that also
loves and desires more than anything that we be reconciled to Him to
experience the life that was intended for us) that we can understand
that this being is worthy of our worship. (MORE)

In our postmodern times, it is popular to think that all
things are
equally true. Buddhism is true for some, Hinduism is true for
some,
and Christianity is true for some in this age. Of course,
like the
Christian, the Hindu believes Hindu doctrine is true, and thusly cannot
agree with the Postmodernist, just as the Christian cannot
believe.
This dilemma fits for many. It seems that perhaps the person
who wants
to believe whatever he wants to believe is the only person who claims
that there is no truth. If he is wrong, then the truth will
eventually
catch up to him and prove him wrong. But HOW can we know what
the
TRUTH is? (MORE)

We know that God is the 'unlimited being', or the ultimate goal of the
striving of our intellect and our will. Thus His essence is His
existence, and perfection is His nature. But because He is infinite
and we are finite, we can only consider His nature in terms we can
understand. (MORE)